Monday, August 31, 2009

Last of August

Catbird
Jack-in-the-Pulpit fruit

Pearl crescent


Look carefully at those brown seed heads in the meadow.



Grasshopper



Mating sachems




Sunday, August 16, 2009

Cicadas

This is the annual cicada that we hear "singing" during these late hot summer days. We are more likely to hear rather than see them.
The cicada nymphs live underground and feed on roots. Then they climb up on trees (or on the outside wall of my apartment), molt and emerge as adults. This is the discarded skin.

This huge wasp is a cicada killer.


The cicada killer wasp takes the cicada to her underground burrow, where she will lay an egg on it and her babies will eat the still alive cicada. In fact it may take two or three cicadas to raise a female wasp, becuase they are so big.



Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Odds and Ends

Odd. When is a black butterfly not a black butterfly! This is a female eastern tiger swallowtail, you know that big beautiful yellow butterfly. The females mimic the toxic pipevine swallowtails as protection.


Ends! These are mated wasps, flying as one.


Odd indeed! This purple coneflower has developed an unusual growth pattern.



The end of the wild bergamot in the meadow means seeds for the goldfinch to eat.




Saturday, August 8, 2009

A Walk Before Dinner

Another new dragonfly. This is a male twelve-spotted skimmer. Isn't it a beauty! The size is 2 inches. From Dragonflies Through Binoculars, "During territorial disputes, the male that can fly vertical loops around his opponent wins."
This beautiful hibiscus glows in the garden behind H-9. It is the size of a dinner plate.




Sometimes it is fun to walk in the late afternoon, and there are always interesting things to be seen.
This blue vervain in the meadow seemed to attract so many butterflies late in the day. There were 5 on it, but only a few remained for the photo.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

No Butters only Dragons

This is a female eastern amberwing. Size 0.9 inches. Seen here perched on the head of a black-eyed Susan.
This damselfly was on the road, and I am calling it a "purple bluet", though I do not know what it is. My only reference is a web site for Georgia damselflies. I do wish there was a book or web site for dragonflies and damselflies of Pennsylvania or the mid-Atlantic region. Can anyone help?

Halloween Pennant. Size is 1.5 inches. Not the greatest photo, and I have seen this one before.


This beautiful creature is a band-winged Meadowhawk. Size is 1.3 inches. It was feeding on the side of the meadow, but when I returned to this spot later, it was gone. I was lucky to see it.
I am still waiting impatiently for some beautiful butterflies to appear, but I am happy to be learning all these new dragonflies in the meantime.